Garage Pole Barn Kit

Houses can be built in a large variety of configurations. A basic division is between free-standing or detached dwellings and various types of attached or multi-user dwellings. Both sorts may vary greatly in scale and amount of accommodation provided. Although there appear to be many different types, many of the variations listed below are purely matters of style rather than spatial arrangement or scale. Some of the terms listed are only used in some parts of the English speaking world.

Detached dwellings / Single-unit housing

Main article: Single-family detached home
  • A-frame: so-called because of the appearance of the structure, namely steep roofline.
  • Addison house: a type of low-cost house with a concrete floor and cavity walls of concrete blocks, built in the UK between 1920 and 1921.
  • Airey house: a type of low-cost house developed in the UK in the 1940s by Sir Edwin Airey, recognisable by its precast concrete columns and walls of precast ship-lap concrete panels.
  • Barndominium: a type of house that includes living space attached to a workshop, barn (typically horses) or large vehicles such as an RV.
  • Bay-and-gable: a type of house typically found in the older areas of Toronto.
  • Bungalow: a single-story house without a basement.
  • Cape Cod: popular in the Northeastern United States.
  • Cape Dutch: popular in the Western Cape, South Africa.
  • Castle: primarily a defensive structure dating from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century.
  • Chalet bungalow: popular in England, a combination of a house and a bungalow.
  • Chattel house: a small wooden house occupied by working-class persons in Barbados.
  • Colonial house: a traditional style of house in the United States.
  • Conch House: a traditional style of house in the southern United States.
  • Cottage: usually a small country dwelling, but weavers' cottages are three-storied townhouses with the top floor reserved for the working quarters.
  • Craftsman house
    • Deck House: custom-built post and beam homes using high-quality woods and masonry.
  • Creole cottage: a type of house native to the Gulf Coast of the United States, roughly corresponding to the location of the former settlements of French Louisiana.
  • Cracker House: a style of wood-frame home used somewhat widely in the 19th century in Florida.
  • Detached (free-standing): any house that is completely separated from its neighbours.
  • Dogtrot: two buildings connected by a breezeway.
  • Earth sheltered: using earth against building walls for external thermal mass, to reduce heat loss, and to maintain easily a steady indoor air temperature.
  • Farmhouse: the main residence on a farm.
  • Faux chateau (1980s - 90s): inflated U.S. suburban house with non-contextual French Provençal references.
  • Foursquare house
  • Gablefront house (or Gablefront cottage ): a vernacular house type which has a gable roof facing the street.
  • Gambrel: also known as Dutch Gambrel
  • Geodesic dome: pioneered by Buckminster Fuller
  • Hawksley BL8 bungalow: aluminium-clad timber-framed house build in the UK in the 1950s.
  • I-house: a traditional British folk house, became popular in middle and southern U.S. Colonies.
  • Igloo: constructed of ice or snow
  • Indian vernacular
  • Izba: a traditional Russian wooden house.
  • Konak: a type of Turkish home in the Ottoman Empire.
  • Link-detached: adjacent detached properties that do not have a party wall, but are linked by the garage(s) so forming a single frontage.
  • Linked: rowhouse or semi-detached house that is linked only at the foundation. Above ground, it appears as a detached house. Linking the foundations reduces cost.
  • Log cabin: a house built of unsquared timbers.
  • Lustron house: a type of prefab house
  • Manor house : a country house, which historically formed the administrative centre of a manor , the lowest unit of territorial organization in the feudal system.
  • Mansion: a very large detached house
  • McMansion: a formulaic, inflated suburban house with references to historical styles of architecture.
  • Manufactured home
  • Mews property: a mews is an urban stable-block that has been converted into residential properties. The houses are converted into ground floor garages with a small flat above which used to house the ostler.
  • Microhouse: a dwelling that fulfils all the requirements of habitation (shelter, sleep, cooking, heating, toilet) in a highly compact space. Very common in Japan. See external links., , and for examples of microhouses.
  • Monolithic dome: a structure cast in one piece over a form, usually of concrete
  • Microapartment: popular in Japan, single room containing kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, and living space in one place (usually on many floors).
  • Mudhif: a traditional reed house made by the Madan people of Iraq.
  • Octagon house: a house of symmetrical octagonal floor plan, popularized briefly during the 19th century by Orson Squire Fowler.
  • Patio home
  • Pole house: a timber house in which a vertical poles carry the load of the suspended floors and roof, allowing all the walls to be non-loadbearing.
  • Prefab: a house where the main structure is prefabricated (common after WWII).
  • Ranch: a single-story house, usually with garage and basement.
  • Queenslander: a house most commonly built in the tropics of Australia. Raised on stumps to allow airflow underneath and with a wide verandah partially if not fully around the house.
  • Roundhouse: a type of house with a circular plan, built in Western Europe prior to the Roman occupation.
  • Saltbox: a style of house popular in colonial New England.
  • Split-level house: a style popular in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • Sears house: owner-built "kit" houses sold by Sears, Roebuck and Co. through its catalog division from 1906 to 1940.
  • Shack: a small, usually rundown, wooden building.
  • Shotgun house: a popular style of house in New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Souterrain: an earth dwelling typically deriving from Neolithic or Bronze Age times.
  • Stilt houses or Pile dwellings: houses raised on stilts over the surface of the soil or a body of water.
  • Snout house: a house with the garage door being the closest part of the dwelling to the street.
  • Splits
    • Backsplit: multilevel house that appears as a bungalow from the front elevation.
    • Frontsplit: multilevel house that appears as a two-story house in front and a bungalow in the back. It is the opposite of a backsplit and is a rare configuration.
    • Sidesplit: multilevel house where the different levels are visible from the front elevation.
  • Storybook houses: 1920s houses inspired by Hollywood set design.
  • Tipi
  • Treehouse: a house built among the branches or around the trunk of one or more mature trees and does not rest on the ground.
  • Trullo: a traditional Apulian stone dwelling with conic roof.
  • Tudor: the style of architecture and decorative arts modeled on the original Tudor architecture produced in England between 1485 and 1603.
    • Mock Tudor: a modern emulation of Tudor architecture.
  • Underground home: an underground dwelling
  • Unit: a type of medium-density housing found in Australia and New Zealand.
  • Unity house: a type of low-cost dwelling built in the UK in the 1940s and 1950s, with walls of stacked concrete panels between concrete pillars. About 19,000 were constructed.
  • Vernacular house: house constructed in a native manner, close to nature, using the materials locally available.
  • Victorian house
  • Villa: originally an upper-class count

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